Welcome to Day 9 of AWESOME-tober-fest 2010. This is werewolf novel week. Today, let’s take a look at official Universal Studios Wolf Man books.
Universal Studios has often tried to spread their popular monsters into other media besides movies. One of those being paperback fiction. Despite having a stable of very popular monsters, their efforts have been hit or miss. Here are a group of fully authorized Universal Studios Wolf Man novels.
I’ll review the ones I’ve actually read.
The Wolfman by Jonathan Maberry – This one is the most recent. It was released in February 2010. This is the movie novelization of the recent Wolf Man reboot by Joe Johnston staring Benicio Del Toro and Sir Anthony Hopkins. I haven’t read this, but I enjoyed the movie enough that I may try to grab this off Paperbackswap.com. I know the movie had a bunch of script problems and changes, I’d be interested to see how this novel’s story is different. If you haven’t, check out the movie. I’ll talk more about the movie, including a review, in the next few weeks.
Blood Moon Rising (Universal Studios Monsters Book 2) by Larry Mike Garmon – Released in 2001, this was book 2 in a Juvenile Fiction series. I mentioned Book 3 during AWESOME-tober-fest last year because it features Frankenstein. When I stumbled across this book at the annual library book sale this year for less than a quarter, I decided to pick it up. And I read it. And it sucked. They aren’t kidding when they say JUVENILE fiction. This book was like one of the bad Scooby Doo episodes. The story revolves around three teens who mistakenly release the Universal Monsters into this world and must chase them all down and trap them back into their movies. Book 1 featured Dracula. This book features Wolf Man and the story takes place down south in the Florida swamps. The whole book and storyline is a pale imitation of a Three Investigators or Hardy Boys book. It may work for late elementary and junior high kids, but it’s really bad for anyone that’s any more mature than that. I was really disappointed at the cheesiness of this book.




























